A digital seismic sensor adapted to be connected, via a two-conductor line, to an acquisition device. The digital seismic sensor includes: a digital sensor; a local sampling clock providing a sampling frequency; a receiver for receiving command data coming from the acquisition device and synchronization information providing accurate timing information to enable seismic sensor synchronization; a compensator for compensating, as a function of the synchronization information, a drift of the local sampling clock; a transmitter for transmitting seismic data towards the acquisition device; a driver for driving the receiver and the transmitter, according to a half-duplex transmission protocol over the two-conductor line and using a transmission clock extracted from the received command data; a power receiver for receiving electrical power; and a coupler for coupling the command and synchronization information receiver, the transmitter and the power receiver to the two-conductor line.

Patent
   9557431
Priority
Jun 19 2012
Filed
Oct 08 2015
Issued
Jan 31 2017
Expiry
Jun 19 2033

TERM.DISCL.
Assg.orig
Entity
Large
0
13
EXPIRED<2yrs
11. A string of seismic data acquisition sensors comprising:
a first digital seismic sensor;
a second digital seismic sensor; and
a two-conductor line connecting the first digital sensor to the second digital seismic sensor,
wherein the first and second digital seismic sensors send digital seismic data along the two-conductor line, and
the first and second digital seismic sensors receive power along the two-conductor line,
wherein the first digital seismic sensor comprises:
a digital accelerometer that measures the seismic data;
a local sampling clock that generates a sampling frequency for the digital accelerometer;
a receiver configured to receive, along the two-conductor line, synchronization information providing timing information to enable first digital seismic sensor synchronization and also configured to receive command data from an acquisition device;
a transmitter that transmits the seismic data, along the two-conductor line, to the acquisition device;
a processor that drives the receiver and the transmitter, according to a half-duplex transmission protocol over the two-conductor line, and compensates, as a function of the synchronization information, a drift of the local sampling clock;
a power unit that receives power over the two-conductor line; and
a coupling unit that connects the power unit, receiver and transmitter to the two-conductor line.
1. A seismic data acquisition system comprising:
a first digital seismic sensor;
a second digital seismic sensor;
a two-conductor line connecting the first digital sensor to the second digital seismic sensor; and
a seismic acquisition device connected to the two-conductor line,
wherein the first and second digital seismic sensors send seismic data to the seismic acquisition device along the two-conductor line,
the seismic acquisition device sends power to the first and second digital seismic sensors along the two-conductor line, and
the first digital seismic sensor comprises:
a digital accelerometer that measures the seismic data;
a local sampling clock that generates a sampling frequency for the digital accelerometer;
a receiver configured to receive, along the two-conductor line, synchronization information providing timing information to enable first digital seismic sensor synchronization and also configured to receive command data from the acquisition device;
a transmitter that transmits the seismic data, along the two-conductor line, to the acquisition device;
a processor that drives the receiver and the transmitter, according to a half-duplex transmission protocol over the two-conductor line, and compensates, as a function of the synchronization information, a drift of the local sampling clock;
a power unit that receives power over the two-conductor line; and
a coupling unit that connects the power unit, receiver and transmitter to the two-conductor line.
15. A method for collecting seismic data, the method comprising:
deploying a string including first and second digital seismic sensors connected to each other with a two-conductor line;
connecting the first and second digital seismic sensors to a seismic acquisition device through the two-conductor line;
collecting analog seismic data with the string;
digitizing the analog seismic data in each of the first and second digital seismic sensors; and
transmitting the digitized seismic data to the seismic acquisition device along the two-conductor line,
wherein the first digital seismic sensor comprises:
a digital accelerometer that measures the seismic data;
a local sampling clock that generates a sampling frequency for the digital accelerometer;
a receiver configured to receive, along the two-conductor line, synchronization information providing timing information to enable first digital seismic sensor synchronization and also configured to receive command data from an acquisition device;
a transmitter that transmits the seismic data, along the two-conductor line, to the acquisition device;
a processor that drives the receiver and the transmitter, according to a half-duplex transmission protocol over the two-conductor line, and compensates, as a function of the synchronization information, a drift of the local sampling clock;
a power unit that receives power over the two-conductor line; and
a coupling unit that connects the power unit, receiver and transmitter to the two-conductor line.
2. The system of claim 1, wherein the seismic acquisition device sends commands to the first and second digital seismic sensors along the two-conductor line.
3. The system of claim 1, wherein the first digital seismic sensor is one of a MEMS-based accelerometer, MEMS-based velocimeter and an analog geophone integrated with an analog/digital converter.
4. The system of claim 1, wherein the coupling unit comprises:
two capacitors connected between the two-conductor line and the receiver and transmitter; and
two inductors connected between the two-conductor line and the power unit.
5. The system of claim 1, wherein the digital accelerometer comprises:
an analog-to-digital converter sampling the seismic data at the sampling frequency provided by the local sampling clock, thus providing a series of sampled and dated seismic data having a time provided by the local sampling clock,
and wherein the processor comprises:
a time-keeping module that measures a frequency error of the local sampling clock, the time-keeping module gauging the local sampling clock to the synchronization information, and
a re-sampling module that corrects the sampled and dated seismic data, as a function of the measured frequency error.
6. The system of claim 1, further comprising:
an all digital delay locked loop that extracts a transmission clock from the received command data.
7. The system of claim 1, wherein the first and second digital seismic sensors form a string of sensors attached to the seismic acquisition device.
8. The system of claim 1, wherein the seismic acquisition device is configured to be connected to a central unit for transmitting the seismic data.
9. The system of claim 1, wherein the seismic acquisition device comprises:
a local clock that generates a local time;
an interfacing block that interfaces with other seismic acquisition devices;
a processor;
a power supply block that supplies electrical power to the first and second digital seismic sensors over the two-conductor line;
a receiver that receives at least seismic data and quality control data from the first and second digital seismic sensors over the two-conductor line;
a transmitter that transmits command instructions to the first and second digital seismic sensors over the two-conductor line; and
an all digital delay locked loop that extracts a transmission clock from data received from first and second digital seismic sensors over the two-conductor line.
10. The system of claim 1, wherein each of the first and second digital seismic sensors has its own housing and each housing is identical to a housing of a corresponding analog seismic sensor.
12. The string of sensors of claim 11, wherein one of the first and second digital seismic sensors sends the digital seismic data to a seismic acquisition device along the two-conductor line.
13. The string of claim 11, wherein the first digital seismic sensor is one of a MEMS-based accelerometer, MEMS-based velocimeter and an analog geophone integrated with an analog/digital converter.
14. The string of claim 11, wherein the digital accelerometer comprises:
an analog-to-digital converter sampling the seismic data at the sampling frequency provided by the local sampling clock, thus providing a series of sampled and dated seismic data having a time provided by the local sampling clock,
and wherein the processor comprises:
a time-keeping module that measures a frequency error of the local sampling clock, the time-keeping module gauging the local sampling clock to the synchronization information, and
a re-sampling module that corrects the sampled and dated seismic data, as a function of the measured frequency error.
16. The method of claim 15, further comprising:
sending power from the seismic acquisition device to the first and second digital seismic sensors along the two-conductor line.
17. The method of claim 15, further comprising:
sending commands from the seismic acquisition device to the first and second digital seismic sensors along the two-conductor line.
18. The method of claim 15, wherein the first digital seismic sensor is one of a MEMS-based accelerometer, MEMS-based velocimeter and an analog geophone integrated with an analog/digital converter.

This application is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 13/921,827 filed on Jun. 19, 2013, which claims the benefit of EP Patent Application No. 12172569.1 filed on Jun. 19, 2012, the contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.

None.

None.

The field of the invention is that of seismic data acquisition. More specifically, particular embodiments of the invention relate to a digital seismic sensor and an acquisition device adapted to be connected together via a two conductor line. A particular application of the invention relates to land seismic data acquisition systems.

These embodiments of the invention can be applied in particular in the industry of oil exploration by seismic method, but may be applied to any field implementing a seismic data acquisition.

Seismic data acquisition systems conventionally use cabled networks comprising electronic units whereto ground movement sensors are connected.

FIG. 1 illustrates schematically a seismic data acquisition system according to a first known solution, based on the use of analog sensors 4.

For the sake of simplification, each reference 4 designates an analog sensor and its corresponding housing and casing (as detailed below with FIG. 6).

To collect the seismic data (geophysical data), one or a plurality of seismic sources (not shown in FIG. 1) in contact with the ground are activated to propagate omni-directional seismic wave trains. The sources may among other things consist of explosives, falling weights, vibrators or air guns in marine environments. The wave trains reflected by the layers of the subsurface are detected by the analog sensors 4, which generate an analog signal characterising the reflection of the waves on the geological interfaces of the subsurface.

The analog sensors 4 are generally referred to using the term “analog geophones”. As shown in FIG. 6, they are generally interconnected in groups of sensors by a two-conductor line 5 (or a three-conductor line for a serial-parallel configuration) to form clusters referred to as “strings of analog geophones”. To this end, each analog geophone is mounted in a mechanical housing (or cartridge) 62. This mechanical housing 62 of analog sensor is inserted with mechanical tolerances inside a casing 61 (made of plastic in general) which shape is dependent of the type of area to investigate (marsh, land . . . ). The two-conductor line 5 is usually moulded to the casing 61.

Each of the strings is connected to an acquisition device 3 (several strings can be connected to the same acquisition device). To this end, the acquisition device is also mounted in a mechanical housing which comprises a connector 63 with two contacts, adapted to cooperate with a connector 64 of the same type placed on the two-conductor line 5 (i.e. the cable of the string).

A string of analog geophones allows to filter the noise (spatial filtering), since the analog information circulating on the two-conductor line 5 (towards the acquisition device 3) is the average of measurements made by each of the analog geophones.

The acquisition devices 3 are generally referred to using the term “Digitizer Unit”. They are interconnected by a cabled network (e.g. a four-conductor line), perform the analog to digital conversion of analog signals coming from the groups of sensors and send the resulting digital seismic data to a central recording system 1 (also referred to using the term “central data processing unit”), via intermediate collection devices 2 (also referred to using the term “concentrator device”). The central recording system 1 is usually onboard a recording truck.

The acquisition devices 3 also performs other functions, notably: synchronisation with the central recording system 1, processing of the seismic signal and interfacing with the digital network (i.e. transferring seismic data to the central recording system 1, receiving and processing commands received from the central recording system 1).

FIG. 2 illustrates schematically a seismic data acquisition system according to a second known solution, based on the use of digital sensors 20. Identical elements are designated by the same numerical reference sign.

The digital sensors 20 are generally referred to using the term “Digital Unit”. Each digital unit includes a sensor which is a micro-machined accelerometer (also referred to using the term “MEMS-based accelerometer”. MEMS being the acronym for “Micro-Electro-Mechanical System”).

Comparing with FIG. 1, each digital unit replaces an acquisition device 3 and the string or strings of analog sensors 4 connected to it via a two-conductor line 5. As the acquisition devices 3 of FIG. 1, the digital units 20 are interconnected by a cabled network (e.g. a four-conductor line) and send the digital seismic data to a central recording system 1, via intermediate collection devices 2.

In a known alternative embodiment, the acquisition device 3 or the digital sensors 20 use a wireless network to communicate with the intermediate collection devices 2 and/or the central recording system 1.

In another known alternative embodiment, the acquisition device 3 or the digital sensors 20 use have a memory sufficient for a later seismic data harvesting.

The digital sensors offer advantages over analog sensors (particularly in terms of bandwidth and sensibility stability). However, the solution of FIG. 2 is not optimal if one wishes to make an acquisition with a high number of digital sensors (for example a thousand digital sensors, and thus a thousand digital units 20) by acquisition line (each acquisition line being connected to an intermediate collection devices 2). Indeed, in this case, all the digital units of an acquisition line are connected in series, which requires a robustness of each digital unit (in quality design and manufacturing, which is expensive).

In addition, the solution of FIG. 2 can not have multiple-sensor strings on a same acquisition line (as opposed to the solution of FIG. 1, with strings of analog geophones). However, there are advantages to use a string of digital geophones, notably:

At least for these reasons, and for cost reasons, the inventors have come to the conclusion that it would be interesting to implement strings of digital sensors, using the well-proven string technique comprising a two-conductor line 5 (i.e. the cable of the string) and associated connectors 63, 64, casing 61 and housing 62 (see FIG. 6).

In a particular embodiment, the proposed solution should also allow to connect only one digital sensor to the acquisition device, via a two-conductor line (i.e. a connection according to a bus topology, also referred to as a branch topolgy).

Unfortunately, there is currently no solution as discussed above, combining the concepts of string and digital sensor. In other words, it is not possible today to use the existing cable (two-conductor line 5) of the strings by replacing, in mechanical housing (or cartridge) 62 of analog sensors, these analog sensors by digital sensors.

As explained above, this mechanical housing 62 of analog sensors is inserted with mechanical tolerances inside a casing 61 (made of plastic in general) which shape is dependent of the type of area to investigate (marsh, land . . . ).

It must be noted that it is was not obvious for the Man skilled in the art, at the time the present invention was made, to fins a technical solution allowing to connect one or several digital sensors and an acquisition device together, using a two-conductor line usually used to connect one or several analog sensors, which further is a poor quality cable.

Indeed, currently, a given digital unit is connected to another digital unit, via a two pairs line cable, which is a good qualify (and therefore expensive) cable, by which:

It is important to note that the Man skilled in the art is faced with the following dilemma: the digital sensor should receive the sampling clock via a poor quality (low cost) standard geophone cable (i.e a two-conductor line). But in the facts, this is impossible. Indeed, the noise on the line does not allow it. More precisely, the phase jitter of the data, and hence of the sampling clock after recovery by the PLL, on this cable would be too high. In other words, attenuation and distortion induced by such a cable degrade the temporal precision of a clock that would be transmitted on that cable. Moreover such a cable gets (“picks up”) the ambient electronic noise that would degrade even more this clock.

The Man skilled in the art is faced with another problem: the use of a phase lock loop (PLL), in order to recover the sampling clock coming from the central recording system 1, induces a size which is not compatible with a desired objective of placing the digital sensor in a housing containing usually an analog sensor.

The use of a PLL also induces a great power consumption which is not compatible with a desired objective to reduce the power consumption of the acquisition device.

Thus, the Man skilled in the art has therefore no incentive to pursue the course of trying to combine the concepts of sensor string and digital sensors.

A particular embodiment of the invention proposes a seismic sensor adapted to be connected, via a two-conductor line, to as acquisition device which acquires seismic data provided by the seismic sensor and transmits said seismic data to a central recording system or to an intermediate collection device. Said seismic sensor is a digital seismic sensor comprising:

This particular embodiment relies on a wholly novel and inventive approach, combining several features:

According to a particular feature, said means for coupling are suitable for a connection to said two-conductor line according to a bus topology.

Thus several digital seismic sensors according to an embodiment of the invention can be connected to a same two-conductor line according to a bits topology (i.e. a branch topology). In other words, this allows to implement a string of digital seismic sensors, which is connected to the two-conductor line. See above the advantages to use such a string of digital sensors.

According to a particular feature, said digital sensing mean comprises an analog/digital converter sampling data at the sampling frequency provided by said local sampling clock, thus providing a series of sampled and dated seismic data having a time provided by the local sampling clock. Said means for compensating a drift of said local sampling clock comprise;

According to a particular feature, the seismic sensor is integrated in a “standard analog geophone” like mechanical housing.

This allows to use a well-proven mechanical housing technique, for the digital sensor.

According to a particular feature, the seismic sensor comprises a all digital delay locked loop, extracting the transmission clock front the received command data.

An ADDLL has the same function as PLL but produces a clock with a high phase noise not compatible with the MEMS-based accelerometer noise specifications.

The fact that, according to the particular embodiment of the invention, the local sampling clock and the transmission clock are dissociated allows to use an ADDLL which has many advantages:

According to a particular feature, said digital sensing mean belongs to the group comprising: MEMS-based accelerometers, MEMS-based velocimeters and analog geophones integrated with an analog/digital converter.

According to a particular feature, said digital sensing mean is a single component sensor.

Thus the compactness of the seismic digital sensor is further improved.

According to an alternative embodiment, said digital sensing mean is a three-component sensor.

Another particular embodiment of the invention proposes a string of seismic sensors comprising a plurality of seismic sensors connected to a two-conductor line, said two-conductor line being adapted to be connected to an acquisition device which acquires seismic data provided by said plurality of seismic sensors and transmits said seismic data to a central recording system, or to an intermediate collection device. Each of said seismic sensor is a seismic sensor according to any one of the above embodiments.

Another particular embodiment of the invention proposes an acquisition device adapted to be connected, via a two-conductor line, to at least one seismic sensor, said acquisition device comprising means for acquiring seismic data provided by the at least one seismic sensor and means for transmitting said seismic data to a central recording system or to an intermediate collection device. The acquisition device comprises:

The proposed acquisition device is adapted to cooperate (via a two-conductor line) with one or a siring of several new digital seismic sensors as presented above.

According to a particular feature, the acquisition device comprises an analog/digital converter, switching means and means for enabling/disabling such that, if said at least one seismic sensor is of a digital type:

According to a particular feature, said means for enabling/disabling are such that, if said at least one seismic sensor is of an analog type:

Thus, the same acquisition device can be used wither with one or a string of several classical analog seismic sensors, or with one or a string of several new digital seismic sensors.

According to a particular feature, the acquisition device comprises means for automatically detecting whether at least one seismic sensor has been connected to the acquisition device via the two-conductor line, and means for automatically determine the type, analog or digital, of the at least one seismic sensor connected to the acquisition device.

According to a particular feature, the acquisition device is integrated in a “standard acquisition device dedicated to analog sensors” like mechanical housing comprising a connector with two contacts, adapted to cooperate with a connector of the same type placed on the two-conductor line.

This allows to use a well-proven mechanical housing technique, for the acquisition device.

According to a particular feature, the acquisition device comprises a all digital delay locked loop, extracting a transmission clock from the received seismic data.

The advantages of using a ADDLL in the acquisition device are the same as those already discussed above for the digital seismic sensor.

Other features and advantages of embodiments of the invention shall appear from the following description, given by way of indicative and non-exhaustive examples and from the appended drawings, of which:

FIG. 1 illustrates schematically a seismic data acquisition system according to a first known solution, based on the use of analog sensors;

FIG. 2 illustrates schematically a seismic data acquisition system according to a second known solution, based on the use of digital sensors;

FIG. 3 illustrates schematically a seismic data acquisition system according to a particular embodiment of the invention;

FIG. 4 details a string appearing in FIG. 3 and comprising two digital sensors connected to an acquisition device;

FIG. 5 details an alternative embodiment of the acquisition device, to which can be connected either a string of digital sensors, or a string of analog sensors;

FIG. 6 illustrates schematically a string of analog geophones according to the prior art.

In all of the figures of the present document, identical elements and steps are designated by the same numerical reference sign.

FIGS. 1, 2 and 6 relate to prior art and have already been discussed above.

Referring now to FIG. 3, we present a seismic data acquisition system according to a particular embodiment of the invention.

As in FIGS. 1 and 2, the seismic data acquisition system comprises a central recording system 1 (usually onboard a recording truck) and intermediate collection devices 2 (“concentrator devices”).

As in FIG. 1, the system also comprises strings of sensors, but in FIG. 3 the sensors used are new digital sensors 31 (see description of FIG. 4 below).

For a best understanding of the present invention, each reference 31 designates a digital sensor and its corresponding housing and casing.

Each string of digital sensors 31 is connected, via a two-conductor line 5, to a new acquisition device 30, also referred to below as “new Digitizer Unit” (see description of FIG. 4 below).

In this particular embodiment, we have the following features:

Thus, we use the well-proven string technique comprising a two-conductor line 5 (i.e. the cable of the string) and associated connectors.

In an alternative embodiment, at least one string comprises only one digital sensor 31 connected to an acquisition device 30 via a two-conductor line 5.

FIG. 4 details a string appearing in FIG. 3 and comprising two digital sensors 31 connected to an acquisition device 30, via a two-conductor line 5.

To simplify the FIG. 4, only one acquisition device 30 is shown, and the network between this acquisition device 30 and the central recording system 1 is not shown.

We detail now the structure of a digital sensor 31 and the structure of an acquisition device 30 according to this first embodiment.

The digital sensor 31 comprises:

The coupling block 318 allows to multiple seismic data transmission, command data reception and electrical power on the same two-conductor line 5. In more details, the coupling block 318 comprises: a first capacitor (connected between a first conductor of the two-conductor line 5 and a first input of die receiving block 313 and a first output of the transmitting block 314), a second capacitor (connected between a second conductor of the two-conductor line 5 and a second input of the receiving block 313 and a second output of the transmitting block 314), a first inductor (connected between the first conductor of the two-conductor line 5 and a first input of the receiving block 315) and a second inductor (connected between the second conductor of the two-conductor line 5 and a second input of the receiving block 315).

The processor 312 implements the following additional functions:

In a particular embodiment, the function of drift compensation is adapted from the teaching of the U.S. Pat. No. 7,548,600 B2 in the name of Sercel.

In the present context, the MEMS-based accelerometer 311 comprises an analog/digital converter (not shown) sampling data at the sampling frequency provided by the local sampling clock 317, thus providing a series of sampled and dated seismic data having a time provided by the local sampling clock 317.

The processor 312, or a coprocessor (not shown), comprises:

All implementation details relating to the time-keeping module and the re-sampling module can be found in the description and drawings of the aforesaid U.S. Pat. No. 7,548,600 B2.

In a particular embodiment, the function of driving the receiving clock 313 and the transmitting block 314, according to a half-duplex transmission protocol over the two-conductor line 5, is carried with any known half-duplex transmission protocol.

In an alternative embodiment, all the functions implemented by the processor 312 (see above discussions) can be implemented by a dedicated hardware machine or component such as an FPGA (Field Programmable Gate Array), an ASIC (Application-Specific Integrated Circuit) or any other hardware module (or any combination of several hardware modules). Any form combining a hardware portion and a software portion can also be used.

In the first embodiment illustrated in FIG. 4, the acquisition device 30 comprises:

The processor 302 implements the traditional functions of an acquisition device (e.g. processing of the seismic signal and interfacing with the digital network, i.e. transferring seismic data to the central recording system 1, receiving and processing commands received from the central recording system 1, etc).

The processor 302 also implements the following additional function: driving the receiving block 303 and the transmitting block 304, according to a half-duplex transmission protocol over die two-conductor line 5 and using the transmission clock extracted by the ADDLL block 306 (see above).

In a particular embodiment, the function of driving the receiving block 303 and the transmitting block 304, according to a half-duplex transmission protocol over the two-conductor line 5, is carried with any known half-duplex transmission protocol. If the string comprises several digital sensors 31 (case shown in FIG. 4), the half-duplex transmission protocol also manages a time division multiplexing (TDM) so as to share the access to the two-conductor line 5 among the acquisition device 30 and the digital sensors 31.

In an alternative embodiment, all the functions implemented by the processor 302 (see above discussions) can be implemented by a dedicated hardware machine or component such as an FPGA, an ASIC or any other hardware module (or any combination of several hardware modules.). Any form combining a hardware portion and a software portion can also be used.

FIG. 5 details an alternative embodiment of the acquisition device 50, to which can be connected either a string of digital sensors (not shown in FIG. 5, but identical to the ease shown in FIG. 4), or a string of analog sensors 51 (case shown in FIG. 5).

Analog sensors 51 are well-known and not described in detail here.

In this alternative embodiment, the acquisition device 50 differs from the one 30 of FIG. 4 in that it comprises an analog/digital converter 309 and a switching block 310 which selects the path for the data coming from the sensors, depending on the type of these sensors (analog or digital), and in that the processor 302 also implements an enabling/disabling function such that:

In a particular embodiment, the acquisition device 50 comprises means for automatically detecting whether a seismic sensor or a string of seismic sensors has been connected to the acquisition device via the two-conductor line, and means for automatically determine the type, analog or digital, of the seismic sensor or seismic sensors connected to the acquisition device.

At least one embodiment of the disclosure provides a technique for connecting one or several seismic digital sensors with an acquisition device, using a two-conductor line usually used to connect one or several seismic analog sensors, even though this two-conductor line is a poor quality cable.

An embodiment provides a technique of this kind allowing to use the existing cable (two-conductor line) of the known strings, by replacing, in mechanical housing of analog sensors, these analogs by digital sensors. Thus, the cost of development of such a technique is low (no new mechanical housing development is necessary).

In other words, at least one embodiment provides a digital sensor having a compactness which allows to place it in a housing containing usually an analog sensor.

An embodiment provides a technique of this kind allowing to reduce the power consumption of the acquisition device.

Hamon, Jacques, Pennec, Daniel, Laine, Jerome

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